| Literature DB >> 31480530 |
Salvador Harguindey1, Julian Polo Orozco2, Khalid O Alfarouk3,4, Jesús Devesa5.
Abstract
The treatment of cancer has been slowly but steadily progressing during the last fifty years. Some tumors with a high mortality in the past are curable nowadays. However, there is one striking exception: glioblastoma multiforme. No real breakthrough has been hitherto achieved with this tumor with ominous prognosis and very short survival. Glioblastomas, being highly glycolytic malignancies are strongly pH-dependent and driven by the sodium hydrogen exchanger 1 (NHE1) and other proton (H+) transporters. Therefore, this is one of those pathologies where the lessons recently learnt from the new pH-centered anticancer paradigm may soon bring a promising change to treatment. This contribution will discuss how the pH-centric molecular, biochemical and metabolic perspective may introduce some urgently needed and integral novel treatments. Such a prospective therapeutic approach for malignant brain tumors is developed here, either to be used alone or in combination with more standard therapies.Entities:
Keywords: cellular acidification in gliomas; etiopathogenesis of gliomas; pH, NHE and proton extruders; pH-centric anticancer paradigm; reverting proton reversal; treatment of glioblastoma multiforme
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31480530 PMCID: PMC6747469 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20174278
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
This Table (modified and updated from ref [49]) shows some carcinogenic factors that increase cellular pH through up-regulation of NHE activity.
| Carcinogenic Factors That Increase Cellular pH Through Up-Regulation of NHE Activity |
|---|
| Proton transporters-extruders (PTs) and proton pumps (PPs) |
| Virus (HPV E5 virus: human papiloma virus) |
| Oncogenes and viral proteins (v-mos, Ha-Ras, HPV16 E7)) |
| Gene products (Bcl-2) |
| p53 deficiency |
| Genetic instability and mutations (BRCA1 and BRCA2?) |
| Chemical carcinogens (benzo(a)pyrene, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, arsenic salts in groundwaters |
| Chronic hypoxia and HIF |
| Different mitogens |
| Hormones and cytokines (Insulin, Growth Hormone, Prolactin, Glucocorticoids, IGF-1, EGF, VEGF, PDGF, Il-1, Il-8, GCSF, TGFß, Angiotensin II, PGE2, Bombesin, Diferric transferrin |
| Glucose overload |
| Ageing (“Time causes cancer”- Otto Warburg) |
Figure 1Growth and trophic factors, and cytokines that are involved in the carcinogenic expression and/or hyperactivity of NHE1 and the consequent increase in pH (modified and updated from ref [13]).
Figure 2The main aim of the pH-centered treatment is to induce a selective low pHi-mediated apoptosis of all cancer cells. This figure also shows the opposite pH ranges in cancer and in human neurodegenerative diseases (HNNDs). The higher the cellular pH, the lower the hydrogen ion concentrations, and vice versa. For further details, see [13,21].
Drugs with a potential benefit in the treatment of malignant brain tumors that, to a large extent, have not yet been clinically or even preclinically tested.
| Drug | Dose and Side Effects | Objective |
|---|---|---|
| Topiramate | Starting dose, 50 mg twice a day. The dose must be increased 50 mg every week until reaching 200 mg twice a day. | Topiramate is a voltage gated sodium channel inhibitor that acidifies glioma cells and reduces the risk of seizures [ |
| Acetazolamide | Starting dose, 125 mg twice a day the first week. And 250 mg twice a day after the first week. | Acetazolamide is a carbonic anhydrase (CA) pan-inhibitor and cell acidifier [ |
| Amiloride (and/ | 10–30 mg three times a day. Hyperkaliemia can be an occasional problem, more with non-liposomal amiloride. | Amiloride is a non-specific NHE inhibitor and the first one that was developed and introduced in the clinic as a K+ sparing diuretic [ |
| Quercetin | There is no established dose for quercetin. Oral doses of 3 g three times a day are well tolerated in the long term. Very poor oral absorption. | Quercetin is a flavonoid sold over the counter as a nutraceutical, a pan-monocarboxylate transporter (MCT) inhibitor and intracelllular MG acidifier [ |
| Fenofibrate | 100 mg twice a day. | Fenofibrate is a PPRα agonist that reduces the motility of glioma cells [ |
| Celecoxib | 400 mg twice a day. | Celecoxib inhibits growth and induces apoptosis [ |
| Cariporide (HOE642) | Cariporide (HOE 642) is a powerful NHE1 inhibitor but, unfortunately, is not available for clinical use in oncology. It is orally bioavailable [ | |
| Diclofenac | Diclofenac inhibits lactate formation and counteracts immune suppression in a murine glioma [ | |
| Dichloroacetate (DCA) | 25–40 mg/kg daily in 2–3 weeks cycles (plus Vitamin B1). | DCA is orally available and has been used frequently for GBM in the experimental context as a cell acidifier and glycolytic inhibitor [ |
| Betulinic acid | Different dosages. | It penetrates the BBB and is highly effective in temozolomide-resistant glioblastoma cells [ |
| Cisplatin (CDDP) | Cisplatin induces pHi acidification and a metabolic shift from glycolysis to oxidative metabolism in cervical cancer cells. This is accompanied by the inhibition of cancer cell growth. Cells either recover, maintaining an alkaline pHi to survive and proliferate, although at reduced growth rates, or undergo cell death [ | |
| Compound 9t (C9t) | C9t has been reported to be 500-fold more potent against NHE1 than cariporide and to have a greater selectivity for NHE1 over NHE2 (1400-fold). Besides, C9t is orally bioavailable, has low side-effects in mice and shows a significantly improved safety profile over other NHE1 inhibitors [ |